Accused Archdiocesan Priests: 162 (does not include 3
accused deacons, 10 accused externs, and 44 accused religious order priests)Total Archdiocesan Priests: 2,324 (does not include an
unstated number of deacons, externs, and order priests)Persons Making Allegations: 815 (does not include 150
who alleged abuse by deacons, non-incardinated priests, or religious order
priests)Cost: $129,600,000 (settlement costs only)

See the Dallas Morning News database entry on Cardinal,
Archbishop Emeritus Bernard Law. The June 2002 database examined the
records of bishops and identified those who had allowed accused priests
to continue working or had otherwise protected priests accused of sexual
abuse. The database is relevant to the bishops' "Nature and Scope"
study because the bishops who prepared the surveys for the study are in
many cases responsible for the "scope" of the problem.

In June 2002, in response to the crisis in the Catholic Church in the
United States brought on by allegations of clergy sexual abuse of children,
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) issued the Charter
for the Protection of Children and Young People. In this document, the
bishops sought to address not only the crimes and sins committed by priests
against children, but also the ways bishops responded to allegations made
by victims against clergy. The Charter acknowledges that in “the
past, secrecy has created an atmosphere that has inhibited the healing
process and, in some cases, enabled sexually abusive behavior to be repeated.”
A National Review Board was established by the USCCB with the task, among
others, of producing two reports: [1] a descriptive study, with the full
cooperation of our dioceses/eparchies, of the nature and scope of the
problem within the Catholic Church in the United States, including such
data as statistics on perpetrators and victims and [2] a comprehensive
study of the causes and context of the current crisis. Both the first
study, undertaken at the request of the Review Board by the John Jay College
of Criminal Justice, and the second report are scheduled to be made public
on February 27, 2004.

The fact that the USCCB instituted and participated in these two national
studies is itself evidence of positive and hopeful development. Unless
and until the scope, causes, and context of the sexual abuse of children
by clergy are understood in all their devastating detail, attempts to
address it will remain insufficient. Studies such as these, and the attention
they engender, serve to help not only our Church but other institutions
and the wider society to confront the evil of sexual abuse of children
and to work toward ensuring our children’s safety. The studies to
be released tomorrow demonstrate that the Church is finally and unflinchingly
committed to facing this scandal head on and doing all in our power to
prevent anything like it from ever happening again.

Since neither of these two national studies will give specifics on any
particular dioceses, it is important that we make public to the members
of the Church of the Archdiocese of Boston, as well as the wider community,
the scope of the issue of sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Archdiocese
of Boston that has come to light over the past two years by making public
the numbers and statistics relative to the issue from 1950-2003.

As I present this information to the people of the Archdiocese of Boston,
I apologize once again to all who have been hurt so grievously by priests
and the bishops who were responsible for supervising them. We thank the
victim-survivors and their families for courageously coming forward and
telling their stories to us and to others. The recent settlements that
have been made by the Archdiocese of Boston and the continuing efforts
of the persons and agencies of the Archdiocese to seek to assist the survivors
and their families in their journey towards healing are concrete acts
that express our sincere contrition and repentance for what has happened.
While progress has been made, more needs to be done. The Archdiocese is
committed to doing everything humanly possible in order to ensure that
this never happens again. As Archbishop of Boston, I make that commitment
once again, on behalf of myself and on behalf of the Church of Boston.

Number of Accused Priests

From 1950 through 2003, a total of 2324 ordained archdiocesan priests
were incardinated in the Archdiocese of Boston. This number includes all
archdiocesan priests who lived in or served in parishes for any period
of time or were involved in pastoral work, such as parishes, hospitals,
diocesan schools, etc. This number does not include priests who are members
of religious orders or priests from other dioceses (non-incardinated priests)
who lived or served in the Archdiocese of Boston during this time.

The numbers reported below relate to accusations of sexual abuse of a
minor during the time period 1950 through 2003 by an ordained priest.
In that time period, a total of 162 archdiocesan priests were alleged
to have sexually abused a minor. The number 162 simply reflects the total
number of priests against whom allegations have been received in this
time period. It does not mean that a determination criminally, civilly,
or canonically, has been made regarding the truth or non-truth of the
allegation. The number of accused priests represents approximately 7%
of the archdiocesan priests who served from 1950-2003.

Of those 162 priests who have had an allegation made against them, the
largest group, 59 priests, were ordained in the period from 1960 through
1969. Of those priests ordained from 1980 through 2003, a period of over
23 years, a total of 8 priests have had an allegation made against them
[sic, without period - reproduced here as the document appears on the
RCAB Web site].

Finally, of the 162 priests who have had an allegation made against
them, 58 are now deceased.

In addition, during the same time period, three men who served as deacons,
10 non-incardinated priests and 44 religious order priests were alleged
to have sexually abused a minor. Since there is no way of knowing with
any accuracy the total number of either religious order or non-incardinated
priests who worked in Archdiocese of Boston from 1950-2003, no percentage
number of accused to general population can be determined as above.

The Number of Victims

From 1950-2003, a total number of 815 people have made an allegation of
sexual abuse of a minor against a priest of the Archdiocese of Boston.
Of these alleged victims, slightly more than half relate to sexual abuse
alleged against just 7 archdiocesan priests.

In addition, there were a total of 150 people who have made allegations
of some abuse of a minor against a deacon, non-incardinated, or religious
order priests.

The Time Frame of Alleged Abuse

The vast majority of allegations involve incidents that are alleged to
have occurred within the period from 1965 to 1982. The number of allegations
involving sexual abuse during the period from 1983 through 2003 shows
a substantial decline in comparison to the prior periods.

(Table does not include incidents where the date could not be determined)

Report Dates

The majority of allegations were reported from January 2002 to December
2003, as can be seen in the following graphic:

(Table does not include incidents where a report date could not be determined)

Settlements Reached

The total amount of money paid by the Archdiocese of Boston through December
2003 in settling sexual abuse claims is $120.6 million. The total amount
recovered from insurance through December 2003 is $22.3 million.

As I and other archdiocesan officials have frequently stated no money
from present parish funds or assets, the annual Catholic Appeal, the Capital
Campaign, Catholic schools, Catholic Charities, or any other programs
of the Archdiocese of Boston will be used to pay for the costs of the
sexual abuse claims. As was widely reported in December, the Archdiocese
borrowed $90 million in order to resolve most of the pending claims. The
money that was borrowed will be paid back through money recovered from
insurance companies and by the sale of archdiocesan property in Brighton,
including the former archbishops’ residence.

Concluding Words

One incident of child abuse is too many, one child hurt too much. We must
all do everything that we can to make sure that the scourge of child abuse
not only within the Church but in the wider society as well is wiped clean
from our midst. The numbers are truly horrific, but they are also telling
both in terms of extent of the problem and the time frame in which the
magnitude of the problem became known.

I extend to all the Catholics of the Archdiocese of Boston and to all
people of good will my sorrow at what has taken place. I take some consolation
in the fact that the number of incidents of abuse occurring within the
last 20 years seems to have dropped so precipitously.

I find consolation in the ongoing witness and ministry of the vast majority
of priests of the Archdiocese of Boston who have remained committed to
the ministry of Church and the witness of Christ’s love for all
in their manner of life. These past few years have not been easy for you,
my brothers. The criminal and immoral actions against children by some
of our brother priests has tarnished us all. Yet, hundreds of you have
faithfully served and continue to serve the people of God in selfless
love for others.

Finally, I take great joy in the people of God who comprise the Church
of the Archdiocese of Boston. The last two years have been a trial for
us all. Our faith has been challenged and sadly some have left the Church
in the wake of this scandal. Yet, the vast majority of you have chosen
to remain and continue to live the good life of faith. Let us continue
to pray and reach out to those who have in any way been hurt by this scandal.
Please pray for me, your bishop, as I do for you, as well as for the victim-survivors
and their families and the good priests of the Archdiocese. May we all
continue through our actions and words to spread the Good News of Christ
found most fully in the life and teaching of the Catholic Church. May
God bless you all.

Boston archdiocese releases abuse report

By Denise Lavoie
Associated Press, carried by the Boston Globe
February 26, 2004

BOSTON (AP) The Boston Archdiocese, the epicenter of the clergy sex abuse
crisis that has shaken the Catholic Church, released a report Thursday
showing that 162 of its priests have been accused of molesting 815 minors
since 1950.

The number of priests alleged to have molested people is about 7 percent
of the 2,324 ordained priests who served in the archdiocese during that
time, according to statistics released by church officials.

''One incident of child abuse is too many, one child hurt too much,''
O'Malley said in a statement. ''We must all do everything that we can
to make sure that the scourge of child abuse not only within the church
but in the wider society as well is wiped clean from our midst.''

The statistics were compiled as part of a nationwide survey of clergy
sex abuse conducted by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New
York.

The national report, scheduled to be released to the public on Friday,
was overseen by the National Review Board, a lay watchdog panel formed
by American bishops after the abuse scandal exploded in Boston in January
2002.

Although the national report contains figures from 1950 through June
2003, the Boston archdiocese's figures released Thursday include allegations
made through December 2003.

Of the 815 allegations of sexual abuse by priests reported from 1950-2003,
slightly more than half the cases involve just seven archdiocesan priests.

Fifty-nine percent of the accused priests were ordained between 1960
and 1969, and 59 of the 162 accused priests are now dead.

The scandal began after internal church files revealed the Rev. John
Geoghan and many other priests were transferred from parish to parish
rather than removed from ministry after they were accused of abusing children.

In December 2002, Cardinal Bernard Law resigned as the archbishop of
Boston the nation's fourth-largest diocese amid a storm of criticism over
his handling of the crisis.

''The numbers are truly horrific, but they are also telling both in terms
of extent of the problem and the time frame in which the magnitude of
the problem became known,'' O'Malley said.

''I take some consolation in the fact that the number of incidents of
abuse occurring within the last 20 years seems to have dropped so precipitously.''

A draft of the national survey seen by CNN earlier this month showed
that 4,450 clergy have been accused of molesting minors since 1950. The
draft survey said 11,000 abuse claims have been filed against the U.S.
churchmen during that period, CNN reported.

The numbers released by the Boston Archdiocese Thursday differs slightly
from an estimate made by Massachusetts Attorney General Thomas Reilly
in July following a 16-month investigation into clergy abuse in Boston.
Reilly's investigation found priests and other church workers had likely
molested more than 1,000 people over six decades, from 1940 to 2000.

Boston attorney Roderick MacLeish Jr., whose law firm won an unprecedented
court ruling ordering the archdiocese to turn over the church personnel
files for all priests who had an allegation of sexual abuse made against
them, said he believes the archdiocese's estimate is a little low.

''We actually believe since we don't have all the records that the figure
is much higher,'' MacLeish said.